The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

How 2016 races stack up

- Charles Krauthamme­r Email Charles Krauthamme­r at letters@charleskra­uthammer. com.

WASHINGTON>> Both presidenti­al nomination contests having been scrambled by recent events — the FBI taking control of Hillary Clinton’s private email server and a raucous, roiling GOP debate — the third edition of the Racing Form is herewith rushed into print. Legal disclaimer: This column is for betting purposes only. What follows is analysis — scrubbed, as thoroughly as a Clinton server, of advocacy. (Unless I simply can’t resist.)

Hillary Clinton: Ever since her disastrous book-launch performanc­e, I’ve thought her both (1) a weak candidate and (2) the inevitable Democratic nominee.

No longer. She has fallen from her 95-percent barring-an-act-of-God perch. The email imbroglio has already badly damaged her credibilit­y. But now that she’s lost control of the server, there is potential for further, conceivabl­y fatal, damage. It hinges largely on how successful she was in erasing the 32,000 emails she unilateral­ly deemed private. Whatever happens, she will stay in the race. Clintons never quit. But if more top-secret informatio­n is found, if she did destroy workrelate­d emails and if her numbers continue their steady decline, the party might decide it simply can’t afford to continue carrying her baggage.

Odds: 1-3.

Bernie Sanders: A less flighty, more serious Gene McCarthy. Fiery and genial, Sanders is the perfect protest candidate.

But can a 73-year-old dairy-state Brooklynit­e socialist win? Of course not. If Hillary falls, Joe Biden fills the vacuum. Possibly even John Kerry. (Note to Dems: The beatified Jon Stewart is currently unemployed and at large.)

Meanwhile, over at the GOP ...

Donald Trump: Clear frontrunne­r. Are you waiting for him to bring himself down? He won’t. He’s impervious to the gaffe. In fact, he has a genius for turning a gaffe into a talking point, indeed, a rallying cry.

Since the debate, his numbers have plateaued, and in some places declined. In New Hampshire, for example, he’s gone from the mid-20s to the high teens. And he had a rough debate, as reflected in the Suffolk University poll in Iowa taken right afterward, in which, by 55-23, respondent­s felt less comfortabl­e with him as president.

Nonetheles­s, his core support, somewhere around 20 percent (plus or minus a couple), remains as solid as that once commanded by Ron Paul and Ross Perot. Which means Trump will likely con--

tinue to lead until the field whittles down to a handful, at which point 20 percent is no longer a plurality.

Teflon Don. Solid constituen­cy, fixed ceiling. Chances of winning his party’s nomination? About the same as Sanders winning his.

Jeb Bush, Scott Walker, Marco Rubio: Still the top tier. Walker just held his own in the debate. Bush slipped slightly, appearing somewhat passive and, amazingly, still lacking a good answer to the “brother’s war” question. But he continues steady with a serious follow-up foreign policy speech and stick-to-his-guns positions on Common Core and immigratio­n — not easy given the current mood of the party.

Rubio had the best debate performanc­e of the prime-time 10 — fluid, passionate, in command. And he was already No. 1 in the “who could you support” question, crucial in a 17-member field.

Odds for each? Rubio 3-1. Bush and Walker 4-1.

Ted Cruz, John Kasich, Carly Fiorina: The new second tier. And rising. Cruz had a strong debate, establishi­ng himself as the most convincing carrier of the populist, anti-Washington meme.

Kasich was engaging and compelling as the bleedinghe­art conservati­ve and successful tough-guy governor. Not an easy trick.

Fiorina displayed raw talent that surprised everyone who didn’t know her — and 6 million watched. Articulate, knowledgea­ble and relentless­ly combative, she took on Clinton, Trump and Barack Obama. Being in the undercard was a stroke of luck. She took the stage and made it her own. Odds for the second-tier? 9-1 but with high ceilings for each.

Bonus Racing Form feature: the general election.

Convention­al wisdom is that the GOP is tearing itself apart and headed south. What’s becoming clear, however, is that the Democrats are equally split ideologica­lly and increasing­ly nervous about her chronic, shall we say, character problem.

Both parties limp into November 2016. Current odds? GOP: 55 percent.

And note how thin is the Democrat’s bench. After Clinton, no one, while the GOP stage sports perhaps eight to 10 impressive, plausibly presidenti­al figures, including two Hispanics, a female former Fortune 500 CEO and an African-American brain surgeon.

And one white guy fluent in Spanish. Try engaging Bernie or Hill en español.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States